Incredibly shocking court documents disclose that a surviving roommate of the murdered Idaho teens observed the culprit depart their house shortly after the shooting.
Following the sounds of one victim sobbing and another stating that “there’s someone here,” Dylan Mortensen observed the suspect—who was masked and dressed in all black—leaving the residence.
She also overheard the culprit declare, “I’m here to help you,” while he committed the horror while wandering the house.
According to the recently released affidavit, which refers to Mortensen as DM, she was accosted by the suspect after looking into the disturbances but seemingly not realizing that the murders had occurred.
Kaylee Goncalves, the victim, was heard “playing with her dog” in a third-floor bedroom at around 4 a.m., according to Mortensen, who reported the incident to police.
a residence in Moscow, Idaho. The culprit was observed by one of the remaining housemates after he committed the atrocity, according to shocking records, but she was oblivious of what had happened and had locked herself in her room.
The eerie affidavit indicates that Mortensen heard Goncalves say “there’s someone here” a short while later as she was in her bedroom on the second level. Mortensen peered outside the door of her bedroom but couldn’t see anything.
Shortly later, “when she heard what she assumed was crying” coming from victim Xana Kernodle’s chamber, she opened her room again.
According to the affidavit, Mortensen then heard a male voice say something along the lines of “it’s ok, I’m going to help you.”
A neighbor’s security camera captured sounds of “what appeared to be voices or a whimper followed by a loud crash” around 4.17 in the morning. There are also repeated barks from a dog.
Mortensen claimed that after hearing weeping, she opened her door a third time and observed a figure approaching her wearing dark clothing and a mask that covered the person’s mouth and nose.
D.M. described the individual as a male, 5′ 10″ or taller, athletically built but not overly muscular, with bushy eyebrows. The woman was in a “frozen shock phase” as the man passed her.
The man moved in the direction of the back sliding glass door. After noticing the man, D.M. shut herself in her room.
D.M. didn’t say whether she knew the man. Investigators are led to think that the murderer fled the scene by this.
According to the police, Mortensen’s remarks and phone records led them to assume that the deaths occurred between 4 and 4.25 am.
On August 13, 2022, a cell tower covering the murder residence at 1122 King Road in Moscow, Idaho, picked up Bryan Kohberger’s phone, which had the prefix 8458.
Between 10:34 and 11:35 that evening, he was close to the victims’ house.
Before the murders on November 13, Kohberger was picked up by a nearby mobile tower at least 11 additional times. Cops have not yet provided more information about those future trips.
On November 13, 2022, at 2:42 a.m., a cell tower in Pullman, Washington, detected Kohberger’s 8458 phone. Kohberger lived at 1630 Northeast Valley Road.
2:47 PM: The phone pings once more, signaling that it has started to move through Pullman to the south. A short while later, the phone ceased pinging, signaling that it had been turned off, dropped from the network, or placed in airplane mode.
At 1122 King Road in Moscow, knife murders of Maddie Mogen, Kaylee Goncalves, Xana Kernodle, and Ethan Chapin occurred between 4:00 and 4:20 in the morning.
At 4:48 a.m., Kohberger’s phone pings the network once more while traveling south on Idaho State Highway 95.
4:50am–5:26am: According to phone pings, it left Genessee, Idaho, headed south on ID95, then turned west toward Uniontown, Idaho, and finally headed back north toward Pullman, Washington.
At 5:30 a.m., Kohberger’s phone pings at 1630 Northeast Valley Road once more, signaling his return.
At nine o’clock on November 13, Kohberger’s phone is once more in motion, heading back toward the King Road murder house. Between 9:12am and 9:21am, a nearby cellular tower picks it up.
Kohberger’s phone says that he has returned to Pullman, Washington, at 9:32 a.m.
The horrifying facts, which were revealed in a cache of documents made public on Thursday, including how Bryan Kohberger’s DNA was discovered on a knife sheath left at the crime site and how he followed the victims’ home in his white Hyundai Elantra before deciding to attack.
In a brief court hearing on Thursday in Moscow, Kohberger, 28, was denied bail. On January 12, he will be in court once more for a status hearing.
For the massacre on November 13, he is accused of four charges of murder and one act of burglary.
He could receive the death penalty if found guilty for the November 13 killings of Idaho students Xana Kernodle and Ethan Chapin, both 20; best friends Madison Mogen and Kaylee Goncalves, both 21; and all four victims were students.
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